Finding housing is the most challenging practical aspect of relocating to Portugal. The rental market is competitive, particularly in Lisbon and Porto. Understanding how the market works, where to search, what contracts mean, and your legal protections is essential.
The Tight Housing Market: Current Reality
Portugal’s housing market has become increasingly competitive since 2017. In Lisbon specifically:
- Rental vacancy rate: Approximately 3-5% (extremely tight; 5-10% is considered healthy)
- Rental price increases: 8-12% annually in Lisbon
- Turnover: Many landlords prefer long-term tourists (Airbnb) to long-term rentals
- Landlord power: In tight markets, landlords hold significant advantage
What this means: You cannot simply arrive and find housing. Most successful Americans secure housing before arriving or within their first month, often spending that first month in a short-term rental or Airbnb while hunting for long-term housing.
Strategy 1: Secure Housing Before Arriving
This is the most stress-free approach but requires commitment from abroad.
How Americans successfully do this:
- Use video tours: Most landlords will do FaceTime/Zoom tours. Ask specific questions about water pressure, heating, noise levels, neighborhood (ask them to show the street at different times).
Use trusted intermediaries:
– Real estate agents (imobiliárias) charge 1-1.5 months’ rent as commission but handle viewings
– Facebook housing groups: Direct landlords are more willing to negotiate
– Airbnb hosts often rent longer-term furnished apartments
Plan a house-hunting trip: If possible, spend a week in your target city visiting apartments. Most Airbnb hosts will cancel and refund if you book an apartment.
Budget for a furnished short-term rental: Many Americans secure an Airbnb or serviced apartment for 1-3 months (€1,200-1,800/month furnished) while hunting for permanent housing. This removes pressure and allows you to understand the neighborhood.
Major Housing Portals
Idealista.pt
The largest Portuguese property portal
80%+ of serious rentals listed here
English translation available
Filters by neighborhood, price, amenities
Mix of direct landlords and agents
Website: idealista.pt
Pro tips:
Sort by “recent” to see newest listings
“Recém no portal” (newly listed) updates daily
Contact quickly—good apartments vanish within hours
You can contact multiple properties simultaneously
Most have contact forms, but WhatsApp is increasingly preferred
OLX.pt
Classified ads site, often cheaper but less regulated
Mix of professional and private landlords
Often €50-200 cheaper than Idealista for same property
Higher risk of scams—be cautious
Direct private landlords (no agent commission)
Website: olx.pt
Imovirtual.com
Large European property portal with Portuguese presence
Similar to Idealista
Slightly smaller inventory
Decent interface and filters
Website: imovirtual.com
Facebook Groups
Increasingly popular for housing
“Housing in Lisbon,” “Finding Accommodation in Lisbon,” “Apartments in Lisbon”
“Porto Housing,” “Cascais Expats,” etc.
Direct landlords, often willing to negotiate
Join your target city’s groups before searching
Scammers exist—verify landlords carefully
Facebook groups often have fewer scams than random sites
Airbnb (Short-term)
For temporary housing while hunting
€30-60/night for basic 1BR in central areas
€20-35/night outside center or in smaller cities
Monthly discounts available (30+ nights)
Furnished, utilities included, no commitment
Use for your first month or two while apartment hunting
Red Flags and Scam Prevention
Portuguese housing scams are increasingly common. Protect yourself:
Major red flags:
Asking for payment before viewing: Legitimate landlords never do this
Extreme price undercuts: If a 1BR in Príncipe Real rents for €1,200 but one listing shows €600, it’s fraudulent
No physical address or address in wrong area: Verify location independently
Only high-quality photos, no street view: Likely stock photos or fake
Landlord only communicates by email, refuses phone/video: Scam indicator
Requesting payment to “secure” apartment before contract: Not legitimate
Protection steps:
Always video tour before commitment
Request multiple photos of exterior, interior, all rooms
Verify address on Google Maps Street View
Contact the landlord by phone and video before payment
Request references from previous tenants
Use secure payment methods (bank transfer to verified account, not Western Union)
Never send upfront payment—only after signing contract
Have contracts reviewed (hire lawyer for €50-100 if unsure)
Rental Contracts: Understanding Your Rights
Portuguese rental law is relatively protective of tenants compared to some European countries. Understanding your rights is important.
Standard Contract Terms
Duration: Typically 1 year, renewable annually. Shorter-term rentals exist but carry higher prices.
Deposit: Usually 1-2 months’ rent. By law, deposits must be held separately and returned upon move-out (minus legitimate deductions for damage, unpaid utilities, cleaning if excessive).
Rent increase: Legally capped at inflation + 0.5% annually. Landlords cannot arbitrarily raise rent significantly.
Utilities: Usually tenant responsibility (electricity, water, internet, gas if applicable).
Maintenance: Landlord responsible for structural issues, major systems. Tenant responsible for minor maintenance.
Termination: Tenants can terminate with 30-60 days notice; landlords must provide 60-120 days notice (more protection for longer tenancies).
What to Verify in Contract
Rent amount and payment method (usually bank transfer on a specific date monthly)
Utilities inclusion/exclusion (almost always excluded—verify)
Lease duration (1 year standard)
Deposit amount (should be 1-2 months maximum)
Notice period for termination (verify it favors you reasonably)
Condition of property (request photo documentation of existing damages)
Pet policy (if applicable)
Tenant Protections
Portuguese law provides:
Eviction protection: Cannot be evicted without cause and proper notice
Rent reasonableness: Can challenge excessive rent increases
Deposit protection: Must be held separately and returned
Habitability standards: Landlord must maintain livable conditions
If problems arise: You can file complaints with local authorities (Câmara Municipal—City Council). Protections are genuinely meaningful, giving tenants reasonable security.
Furnished vs. Unfurnished
Unfurnished (Vazio)
Most common in Portugal
Landlord provides empty apartment
You provide all furniture and kitchenware
Typically €100-300/month cheaper than furnished
Longer-term commitment (landlords prefer tenants who furnish)
What to budget:
Basic furniture: €500-1,500 (bed, table, chairs, sofa)
Kitchen setup: €300-800 (plates, pots, cutlery, etc.)
Bedding, towels, basics: €200-400
Total: €1,000-2,700 startup cost
Furnished (Mobilado)
Increasingly common, especially short-term
Includes basic furniture (bed, table, chairs usually)
Often includes bedding/towels
May not include kitchen equipment fully
€100-300/month more expensive
Better for shorter tenancies
What’s typically included: Basic bedroom/sitting furniture, maybe a sofa. Often NOT included: kitchen, dining table, cleaning supplies, nice decor. Expect to buy supplementary items.
Serviced Apartments
For short-term (1-6 months)
Fully furnished and equipped
Utilities included
Cleaning available
€1,500-2,500/month typical
Used as temporary housing while apartment hunting
Popular Neighborhoods: Where to Look
Lisbon
Príncipe Real
Upscale, young, vibrant
English speakers abundant
LGBTQ+ friendly
€1,200-1,600 (1BR)
Most touristy—gentrification concerns
Alcântara
Emerging creative scene
Young demographic, increasingly popular
Less touristy than Príncipe Real
€900-1,300 (1BR)
Good balance of development and authenticity
Belém
Historic, cultured, family-friendly
Longer commute from business district
More relaxed pace
€1,000-1,400 (1BR)
Less expat-dominated, more Portuguese feel
Marvila
Industrial-chic transformation
Creative spaces, galleries, events
Increasingly popular with younger expats
€850-1,100 (1BR)
Less established infrastructure
Campo de Ourique
Neighborhood feel, young families
Great local restaurants and cafés
Walking distance to city center
€1,100-1,500 (1BR)
Popular with families, slightly quieter
Cascais/Sintra (Greater Lisbon)
Beach towns 25-40km from Lisbon center
€700-1,000 (1BR)
More suburban, family-friendly
Growing tech scene
Trade-off: commute to Lisbon center
Porto
Ribeira
Historic, picturesque
Very touristy
€850-1,200 (1BR)
Charming but crowded
Massarelos
Quieter than Ribeira
More residential feel
€700-900 (1BR)
Less touristy, more authentic
Miragaia
Emerging, cultural focus
Young, creative atmosphere
€750-1,000 (1BR)
Good balance of development and character
Vila Nova de Gaia
Across the river, less touristy
Better local feel
€800-1,100 (1BR)
Popular with families and long-term residents
The Algarve
Lagos
Beach town, younger crowd
English very prevalent
€900-1,400 (1BR)
More touristy, higher prices
Tavira
Charming, less developed than Lagos
Growing expat community
€700-1,000 (1BR)
More authentic Portuguese feel
Inland towns (Loulé, São Brás)
Much cheaper
More authentic Portugal
€500-700 (1BR)
Less developed infrastructure
Utilities: Setting Up Services
Once you secure housing, you’ll need to arrange utilities. Most are tenant responsibility.
Electricity (Luz)
Providers: EDP (largest), Iberdrola, others
€0.35-0.50 per kWh
Monthly bill: €50-100 typical
Set up by contacting provider with rental contract
Takes 5-10 business days
Water and Sewage (Água e Saneamento)
Local authority (Câmara Municipal)
€30-50/month
Usually automatically billed to property
Often requires registration at Câmara
Internet (Internet)
Major providers: Vodafone, MEO (Portugal Telecom), NOS
€40-60/month for fiber/broadband
Excellent quality in cities
Takes 1-2 weeks for installation
Contact provider directly or go to store
Gas (Gás) [if applicable]
If apartment has gas heating:
€30-50/month
Contact provider (Lusitaniagás most common)
Waste/Trash (Lixo)
Usually included in building maintenance fee
Or arranged with municipality
€10-20/month typical
Buying Property: An Option for Some Americans
Some Americans choose to buy property rather than rent. This is viable if you have capital and plan long-term residence.
Portuguese Property Market
Prices (2024):
Lisbon: €6,000-9,000 per square meter
Porto: €4,000-6,000 per square meter
Algarve: €4,000-8,000 per square meter
Inland: €1,500-3,000 per square meter
Example: €250,000 buys roughly 35-50 square meters (380-540 sq ft) in central Lisbon—a 1-bedroom apartment.
Buying Process
Find property (use Idealista, Imovirtual, agents)
Make offer (negotiate, standard practice)
Hire lawyer (€800-1,500 typical fee)
Due diligence (lawyer verifies ownership, debts, etc.)
Sign purchase agreement (usually with 10% deposit)
Arrange mortgage (banks lend 70-80% of value; 3-5% interest typical)
Final deed (notarized transfer, registration)
Advantages:
No landlord, full control
Builds equity
Stable long-term housing
Disadvantages:
Capital requirement (€50,000+ minimum down payment)
Illiquid (takes months to sell)
Property taxes, maintenance, insurance
Bureaucratic process
If staying only 5 years, may not be worth it
For most Americans temporarily relocating: Renting remains more practical.
Final Practical Tips
Start searching 2 months before arrival: Allows time to secure before moving
Join Facebook groups immediately: Housing groups move fast; being in the group when listings post is crucial
Be prepared to commit quickly: Good apartments in central areas rent within hours
Video tour is non-negotiable: Never sign without seeing property
Verify landlord identity: Ask for government ID, business registration if agent
Document conditions: Take photos of existing damages, get landlord to acknowledge
Budget for unfurnished: €1,000-2,500 startup cost for furniture and setup
Plan for utilities setup: Takes 1-3 weeks; arrange before or immediately after signing
Temporary housing allows flexibility: Spending 1-3 months in Airbnb removes pressure
Network with expats: Housing advice from people who’ve recently moved is invaluable
Housing is challenging but navigable. Most Americans successfully secure suitable housing within 1-2 months of arrival. The key is starting early, using all available platforms, and being willing to commit quickly to quality options.
Leave a Reply